THURSDAY, May 23, 2019 (HealthDay News) --
Your unhealthy eating habits could increase your risk of cancer as
much as drinking alcohol can, new research reports.
The Tufts University study found that poor
diets cause about the same number of cancer cases
as alcohol consumption does in the United States.
The researchers said their modeling study
estimated that dietary factors may have accounted for over 80,000 of the new
invasive cancer cases
reported in 2015, or about 5% of that year's total among U.S. adults.
Alcohol was associated with 4% to 6% of
cases, overweight and obesity with 7% to 8% of cases, and physical
inactivity with 2% to 3%, the study authors noted.
The study also found that poor diet was linked with 38% of colorectal cancer cases, and with nearly
26% of mouth, pharynx and larynx cancers reported
in 2015 in the United States.
In actual numbers, in 2015, poor diet was
associated with over 52,200 colorectal
cancer cases; over 14,400 mouth, pharynx and larynx cancers; nearly
3,200 uterine cancers; just over 3,000 cases of breast cancer in postmenopausal women; 2,000 kidney
cancers; nearly 1,600 stomach cancers; and 1,000 liver cancers.
The investigators also looked at specific
eating habits linked with cancer risk.
Low intake of whole grains was associated with
the largest number and proportion of diet-related cancer cases, followed by low
levels of dairy products, eating lots of processed meat or red meat, low
vegetable and fruit consumption and drinking high amounts of sugar-sweetened beverages.
Obesity played a role in about 16% of
diet-associated cancer cases, the findings showed.
Men, middle-aged adults (aged 45 to 64), and
black and Hispanic people had the highest rates of diet-associated cancers,
compared with other age, gender, or racial/ethnic groups, according to the report.
The study was published May 22 in the
journal JNCI Cancer Spectrum.
"Our findings underscore the opportunity
to reduce cancer burden and disparities in the United States by improving food
intake," corresponding author Fang Fang Zhang, a cancer and nutrition
researcher at Tuft's School of Nutrition Science and Policy, said in a
university news release.
-- Robert Preidt Copyright © 2019 HealthDay.
All rights reserved.
SOURCE: Tufts University, news release, May
22, 2019
https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=221264
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